Well... WISE 0855-0714, discovered in 2013, appears to have water clouds. Harlow Shapely proposed such an idea back in 1962. A few obstacles are gravity might be 100 times that of Earth, the relative lack of heavy elements such as potassium, calcium, and iron, which are necessary for living processes with which we are familiar, and organisms would need to evolve to be able to exploit the deep infrared radiation given off by such an object, both for photosynthesis and perception, the latter through eyes equipped for infrared vision or thermal sensors like those of snakes. ooooooo ATMOSPHERIC HABITABLE ZONES IN Y DWARF ATMOSPHERES PDF

I wonder if all these strange objects are in SE. Some are rogue planets, some are brown dwarfs some are in between. The first one, like the WISE object you mentioned, has water in its atmosphere (and also methane.)

Atmosphere[edit]File:Artist's impression of the free-floating planet CFBDSIR J214947.2-040308.9.ogvThis video shows an artist's impression of the free-floating planet CFBDSIR J214947.2-040308.9.Spectroscopy observations have found absorption by gaseous methane and water.[1]

Component B was discovered in 2011 with Spitzer Space Telescope. Its discovery paper is Luhman et al., 2011. At the time of its discovery, WD 0806-661 B was the coldest "star" that has ever been found, with a temperature of only 27–80 °C, which is similar to some hot areas of Earth.[9]

Spectrometry[edit]Its luminosity in different bands of the thermal infrared in combination with its absolute magnitude—because of its known distance—was used to place it in context of different models; the best characterization of its brightness was in the W2 band of 4.6 µm at an apparent magnitude of 13.89±0.05, though it was brighter into the deeper infrared.[3] Infrared images taken with the Magellan Baade telescope suggest evidence of water clouds.[4]

Model-derived understanding[edit]Based on models of brown dwarfs WISE 0855−0714's is estimated to have a mass of 3 to 10 MJup.[1] This mass is in the range of a sub-brown dwarf or other planetary-mass object.

As of 2003, the International Astronomical Union considers an object with a mass above 13 MJup to be capable of fusing deuterium and to be designated a brown dwarf. A lighter object and one orbiting another object is considered a planet.[5] So far this WISE object is alone, though it could be a rogue planet, something first identified in 2004 in the case of Cha 110913-773444.[6]

Combining its luminosity, distance, and mass it is estimated to be the coldest known brown dwarf, with a modeled effective temperature of 225 to 260 K (−48 to −13 °C; −55 to 8 °F), depending on the model.[1]

Oh, for that you can simply write the name exactly as it is , or copy-paste, in the Find Object window (F3).If SpaceEngine says it can't be found, it means that you have a different version of SpaceEngine or most likely whoever published that name has some addon/mod which changed the ID numbers of procedural objects, like galaxy addons and such.